SELECTION FOR CALVING EASE Submitted by Michelle Proscia, Ag Educator With bull turnout and breeding season in mind, we continue to discuss considerations about the bulls we’ll be turning out. Specifically, selection for calving ease. If we intend to breed a set of heifers in spring, calving ease becomes an economically important trait in our next calf crop. Dystocia (calving difficulty) is far more likely to occur in first calf heifers and typically not a significant issue in mature beef cows. With no dystocia, calf death loss within 24 hours of birth is less than 5% but this percentage can increase by as much as 2 – 4 times if calving assistance is required. Heifers that calve unassisted do a better job of raising that calf, have shorter rebreeding intervals, and calf earlier the following year. Obviously, we would like to avoid calving difficulty and if we have identified it as a priority, several selection tools are available. First, sire selection is critical. Over time, 90% of genetic change is a result of sire selection because bulls sire more calves in a breeding season than a cow will produce in her lifetime. Effective sire selection should be
based on EPDs resulting from genetic prediction. Selection based on EPDs is 7 – 9 times more effective than selection based on weights or within herd ratios alone. EPDs are more effective because they are calculated based on individual weights, within herd ratios, pedigree relationship and the performance of all relatives, as well as DNA. So when calving ease is important, consider the following EPDs: Calving Ease Direct (CED), is expressed as a difference in percentage of unassisted births, with a higher value indicating greater calving ease in first-calf heifers. It predicts the average difference in ease with which a sire’s calves will be born when he is bred to first-calf heifers. Extension Connection
July 2021
Example: – Bull A has CED of 5 – Bull B has a CED of 16 If we mate both bulls to a set of virgin replacement heifers, we are 11% less likely to pull a calf sired by bull B Birth Weight EPD (BW), expressed in pounds, is a predictor of a sire’s ability to transmit birth weight to his progeny compared to that of other sires. Example: – Bull C has a Birth Weight EPD of -0.7 – Bull D has a Birth Weight EPD of 3.3 Calves sired by bull C will weigh 4 lbs. less at birth, on average If you will be keeping replacement heifers sired by bulls you’ll be turning out this year, consider: Calving Ease Maternal Page 5